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Writing the Introduction Chapter of Your Thesis or Dissertation

If you were planning to go on one of the most important journeys of your life, you’d most likely think it through carefully beforehand. You might consider the objectives of your trip and ask key questions so that you could meet these objectives. You would likely identify the main problem you faced and find a potential solution to overcome this problem. Ideally, you would plan and make these decisions at the outset of your precious journey.

And so it is when you’re planning your dissertation or thesis, one of the most important academic journeys of your life. You need to identify the research problem and find a diagnosis or potential solution to this problem in the theoretical literature. You need to think through the objectives of your research carefully at the very start and work out research questions that meet these research objectives. No matter how challenging, these decisions are yours to make at the outset, in Chapter 1, your introduction chapter.

Chapter 1 is indeed one of the most challenging chapters to compile as it expects all this, and more, of you as the researcher. You need to convince your reader that you have identified a research problem of social significance, that you have identified its diagnosis or solution in the theoretical literature, and that you are proposing feasible research objectives within doable research. This is a big ask. Thus, you should expect to write, rewrite and re-rewrite this chapter until it flows logically and consistently.

So, let’s consider a structure for Chapter 1 that works for many dissertations and theses.

First, start by briefly describing the background to your research problem. The background will give context to your research problem. It may be a historical background or a broader view of some aspect of your research problem.

Second, describe the foreground or focus of your research. Explain from whose perspective you are viewing the research problem, and why. Here is where you situate the research problem.

Third, couch the problem in the theoretical literature related to your research problem. Here you are expected to show the reader that you are aware of the main debates or views on your topic. Additionally, you need to recognise a deficiency in the theoretical literature, something that isn’t known or covered on your topic. In other words, you need to identify a knowledge gap in the literature. Although your writing will be at a high level without detail here, the theory you cite will form part of your theoretical framework and may also contribute to the conceptual framework of your study.

Fourth, construct your Problem Statement. This entails trial and error, but the following recipe should help you create a perfect problem statement. In a succinct paragraph (⅟2 – ⅔ of a page), briefly summarise the preceding three sections (background, foreground and theoretical literature including the knowledge gap). Then state the social significance of addressing the problem, your potential diagnosis/ solution to the problem, and how this diagnosis or solution could be generalised beyond the particulars of your study. Remember that this is a statement of the problem, so focus on the problem and its potential solution rather than on your research.

Fifth is the all-important Purpose Statement. As this section is about your research, here you need to describe exactly the purpose or objectives of your research, making sure your description is aligned with addressing the knowledge gap that you provided in the problem statement.

Sixth, state the primary and secondary research questions. This is another critical section of the chapter as the overall objective of your research is to answer the research question(s). Thus, you need to ensure that the research questions relate directly to the purpose of your research as you described in the purpose statement. Make sure that your two or three secondary research questions support your primary research question. Additionally, phrase your research questions carefully so that they require broad, complex answers. They are not simply items of your questionnaire.

Seventh, state the scope of your study. Distinguish here among the concepts of the scope – what you’re including in your study, the delimitations – what you decide to exclude from your study, and the limitations – the weaknesses of your study that are not under your control.

Eighth, state the potential contribution to knowledge that your study will be making. The contribution is the difference between what your study intends to show versus what is already known. Be realistic and fair about its contribution.

Finally, present the layout of the following chapters in short paragraphs, not bullet point form.

I have derived this guidance from Bloomberg (2023), Badenhorst (2007), Creswell (2014), and Van de Ven (2007).

Contact me at [email protected] if you need help with your thesis or dissertation. I guide students from conceptualisation to completion of their research.

#thesiswriting #dissertation

5 thoughts on “Writing the Introduction Chapter of Your Thesis or Dissertation”

  1. Thanks Merle. At least I have the information on how to kickstart chapter one and all the subtopics that are on chapter one.

  2. Thanks Merle. At least I have the information on how to kickstart chapter one and all the subtopics that are on chapter one.

  3. Good day Prof . Procrastination and some challenges were getting the better of me , but after the useful info provided , I feel like I am ready to put back my thinking cap and do this whole heartedly. Thank you so much. God bless you

  4. Hi Merle
    I so want your help but I am unemployed and cannot be able to pay you for your services. I have written something already however and was approved by the proffessor I was doing my Theory with. Then I had to do my Thesis my Supervisor wanted me to write her style. Can I send you my research question I wrote?

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